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Malcolm Fraser

John Malcolm Fraser AC CH GCL PC (/ˈfrzər/; 21 May 1930 – 20 March 2015) was an Australian politician who served as the 22nd prime minister of Australia, from 1975 to 1983, holding office as the leader of the Liberal Party of Australia.

Malcolm Fraser
Official portrait, 1977
22nd Prime Minister of Australia
In office
11 November 1975 – 11 March 1983
MonarchElizabeth II
Governors-General
DeputyDoug Anthony
Preceded byGough Whitlam
Succeeded byBob Hawke
Leader of the Liberal Party
In office
21 March 1975 – 11 March 1983
Deputy
Preceded byBilly Snedden
Succeeded byAndrew Peacock
Leader of the Opposition
In office
21 March 1975 – 11 November 1975
Prime MinisterGough Whitlam
DeputyPhillip Lynch
Preceded byBilly Snedden
Succeeded byGough Whitlam
Minister for Education and Science
In office
20 August 1971 – 5 December 1972
Prime MinisterWilliam McMahon
Preceded byDavid Fairbairn
Succeeded byGough Whitlam
In office
28 February 1968 – 12 November 1969
Prime MinisterJohn Gorton
Preceded byJohn Gorton
Succeeded byNigel Bowen
Minister for Defence
In office
12 November 1969 – 8 March 1971
Prime MinisterJohn Gorton
Preceded byAllen Fairhall
Succeeded byJohn Gorton
Minister for the Army
In office
26 January 1966 – 28 February 1968
Prime Minister
Preceded byJim Forbes
Succeeded byPhillip Lynch
Member of the Australian Parliament
for Wannon
In office
10 December 1955 – 31 March 1983
Preceded byDon McLeod
Succeeded byDavid Hawker
Personal details
Born
John Malcolm Fraser

(1930-05-21)21 May 1930
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Died20 March 2015(2015-03-20) (aged 84)
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Resting placeMelbourne General Cemetery
Political partyLiberal (until 2009)
Spouse
(m. 1956)
Children4
Relatives
Education
Alma materMagdalen College, Oxford
OccupationPastoral farmer
Signature

Fraser was raised on his father's sheep stations, and after studying at Magdalen College, Oxford, returned to Australia to take over the family property in the Western District of Victoria. After an initial defeat in 1954, he was elected to the Australian House of Representatives at the 1955 federal election, as a member of parliament (MP) for the division of Wannon. He was 25 at the time, making him one of the youngest people ever elected to parliament. When Harold Holt became prime minister in 1966, Fraser was appointed Minister for the Army. After Holt's disappearance and replacement by John Gorton, Fraser became Minister for Education and Science (1968–1969) and then Minister for Defence (1969–1971). In 1971, Fraser resigned from cabinet and denounced Gorton as "unfit to hold the great office of prime minister"; this precipitated the replacement of Gorton with William McMahon. He subsequently returned to his old education and science portfolio.

After the Liberal-National Coalition was defeated at the 1972 election, Fraser unsuccessfully stood for the Liberal leadership, losing to Billy Snedden. When the party lost the 1974 election, he began to move against Snedden, eventually mounting a successful challenge in March 1975. As Leader of the Opposition, Fraser used the Coalition's control of the Australian Senate to block supply to the Whitlam government, precipitating the 1975 Australian constitutional crisis. This culminated with Gough Whitlam being dismissed as prime minister by the governor-general, Sir John Kerr, a unique occurrence in Australian history. The correctness of Fraser's actions in the crisis and the exact nature of his involvement in Kerr's decision have since been a topic of debate. Fraser remains the only Australian prime minister to ascend to the position upon the dismissal of his predecessor.

After Whitlam's dismissal, Fraser was sworn in as prime minister on an initial caretaker basis. The Coalition won a landslide victory at the 1975 election, and was re-elected in 1977 and 1980. Fraser took a keen interest in foreign affairs as prime minister, and was more active in the international sphere than many of his predecessors. He was a strong supporter of multiculturalism, and during his term in office Australia admitted significant numbers of non-white immigrants (including Vietnamese boat people) for the first time, effectively ending the White Australia policy. His government also established the Special Broadcasting Service (SBS). Particularly in his final years in office, Fraser came into conflict with the "dry" economic rationalist and fiscal conservative faction of his party. His government made few major changes to economic policy.

After losing the 1983 election, Fraser retired from politics. In his post-political career, he held advisory positions with the United Nations (UN) and the Commonwealth of Nations, and was president of the aid agency CARE from 1990 to 1995. He resigned his membership of the Liberal Party in 2009 after the election of Tony Abbott as leader, Fraser having been a critic of the Liberals’ policy direction for a number of years. Evaluations of Fraser's prime ministership have been mixed. He is generally credited with restoring stability to the country after a series of short-term leaders and has been praised for his commitment to multiculturalism and opposition to apartheid, but the circumstances of his entry to office remains controversial and many have viewed his government as a lost opportunity for economic reform. His seven and a half-year tenure as prime minister is the fourth longest in Australian history, only surpassed by Bob Hawke, John Howard and Robert Menzies.

Early life

Birth and family background

John Malcolm Fraser was born in Toorak, Melbourne, Victoria, on 21 May 1930. He was the second of two children born to Una Arnold (née Woolf) and John Neville Fraser; his older sister Lorraine had been born in 1928. Both he and his father were known exclusively by their middle names. His paternal grandfather, Sir Simon Fraser, was born in Nova Scotia, Canada, and arrived in Australia in 1853. He made his fortune as a railway contractor, and later acquired significant pastoral holdings, becoming a member of the "squattocracy". Fraser's maternal grandfather, Louis Woolf, was born in Dunedin, New Zealand, and arrived in Australia as a child. He was of Jewish origin, a fact which his grandson did not learn until he was an adult. A chartered accountant by trade, he married Amy Booth, who was related to the wealthy Hordern family of Sydney and was a first cousin of Sir Samuel Hordern.[1]

Fraser had a political background on both sides of his family. His father served on the Wakool Shire Council, including as president for two years, and was an admirer of Billy Hughes and a friend of Richard Casey. Simon Fraser served in both houses of the colonial Parliament of Victoria, and represented Victoria at several of the constitutional conventions of the 1890s. He eventually become one of the inaugural members of the new federal Senate, serving from 1901 to 1913 as a member of the early conservative parties. Louis Woolf also ran for the Senate in 1901, standing as a Free Trader in Western Australia. He polled only 400 votes across the whole state, and was never again a candidate for public office.[1]

Childhood

Fraser spent most of his early life at Balpool-Nyang, a sheep station of 15,000 hectares (37,000 acres) on the Edward River near Moulamein, New South Wales. His father had a law degree from Magdalen College, Oxford, but never practised law and preferred the life of a grazier. Fraser contracted a severe case of pneumonia when he was eight years old, which nearly proved fatal. He was home-schooled until the age of ten, when he was sent to board at Tudor House School in the Southern Highlands. He attended Tudor House from 1940 to 1943, and then completed his secondary education at Melbourne Grammar School from 1944 to 1948 where he was a member of Rusden House. While at Melbourne Grammar, he lived in a flat that his parents owned on Collins Street. In 1943, Fraser's father sold Balpool-Nyang – which had been prone to drought – and bought Nareen, in the Western District of Victoria. He was devastated by the sale of his childhood home, and regarded the day he found out about it as the worst of his life.[1]

University

In 1949, Fraser moved to England to study at Magdalen College, Oxford, which his father had also attended. He read Philosophy, Politics and Economics (PPE), graduating in 1952 with third-class honours. Although Fraser did not excel academically, he regarded his time at Oxford as his intellectual awakening, where he learned "how to think". His college tutor was Harry Weldon, who was a strong influence. His circle of friends at Oxford included Raymond Bonham Carter, Nicolas Browne-Wilkinson, and John Turner. In his second year, he had a relationship with Anne Reid, who as Anne Fairbairn later became a prominent poet. After graduating, Fraser considered taking a law degree or joining the British Army, but eventually decided to return to Australia and take over the running of the family property.[1]

Early political career

Fraser returned to Australia in mid-1952. He began attending meetings of the Young Liberals in Hamilton, and became acquainted with many of the local party officials. In November 1953, aged 23, Fraser unexpectedly won Liberal preselection for the Division of Wannon, which covered most of Victoria's Western District. The previous Liberal member, Dan Mackinnon, had been defeated in 1951 and moved to a different electorate. He was expected to be succeeded by Magnus Cormack, who had recently lost his place in the Senate. Fraser had put his name forward as a way of building a profile for future candidacies, but mounted a strong campaign and in the end won a narrow victory.[2] In January 1954, he made the first of a series of weekly radio broadcasts on 3HA Hamilton and 3YB Warrnambool, titled One Australia. His program – consisting of a pre-recorded 15-minute monologue – covered a wide range of topics, and was often reprinted in newspapers. It continued more or less uninterrupted until his retirement from politics in 1983, and helped him build a substantial personal following in his electorate.[3]

At the 1954 election, Fraser lost to the sitting Labor member Don McLeod by just 17 votes (out of over 37,000 cast).[4] However, he reprised his candidacy at the early 1955 election after a redistribution made Wannon notionally Liberal. McLeod concluded the reconfigured Wannon was unwinnable and retired. These factors, combined with the 1955 Labor Party split, allowed Fraser to win a landslide victory.[5]

Backbencher

 
Fraser in 1956, shortly after his election to Parliament

Fraser took his seat in parliament at the age of 25 – the youngest sitting MP by four years, and the first who had been too young to serve in World War II.[6] He was re-elected at the 1958 election despite being restricted in his campaigning by a bout of hepatitis.[7] Fraser was soon being touted as a future member of cabinet, but despite good relations with Robert Menzies never served in cabinet during Menzies' tenure. His long wait for ministerial preferment was probably due to a combination of his youth and the fact that Menzies' ministries already contained a disproportionately high number of Victorians.[8]

Fraser spoke on a wide range of topics during his early years in parliament, but took a particular interest in foreign affairs. In 1964, he and Gough Whitlam were both awarded Leader Grants by the United States Department of State, allowing them to spend two months in Washington, D.C., getting to know American political and military leaders. The Vietnam War was the main topic of conversation, and on his return trip to Australia he spent two days in Saigon.[9] Early in 1965, he also made a private seven-day visit to Jakarta, and with assistance from Ambassador Mick Shann secured meetings with various high-ranking officials.[10]

Cabinet Minister and Gorton downfall

 
Fraser as Minister for Education and Science in 1969, with John England

In 1966, after more than a decade on the backbench, Sir Robert Menzies retired as Prime Minister. His successor Harold Holt appointed Fraser to the ministry as Minister for the Army. In that position, Fraser presided over the controversial Vietnam War conscription program.

Under the new prime minister, John Gorton, he was elevated to Cabinet as Minister for Education and Science. In 1969 he was promoted to Minister for Defence, a particularly challenging post at the time, given the height of Australia's involvement in the Vietnam War and the protests against it.

In March 1971 Fraser abruptly resigned from the Cabinet in protest at what he called Gorton's "interference in (his) ministerial responsibilities", and denounced Gorton on the floor of the House of Representatives as "not fit to hold the great office of Prime Minister".[11] This precipitated a series of events which eventually led to the downfall of Gorton and his replacement as prime minister by William McMahon. In the leadership contest that followed Gorton's resignation, Fraser unsuccessfully contested the deputy Liberal leadership against Gorton and David Fairbairn. Gorton never forgave Fraser for the role he played in his downfall; to the day Gorton died in 2002, he could not bear to be in the same room with Fraser.[12]

Fraser remained on the backbenches until he was reinstated to Cabinet in his old position of Minister for Education and Science by McMahon in August 1971, immediately following Gorton's sacking as deputy Liberal leader by McMahon. When the Liberals were defeated at the 1972 election by the Labor Party under Gough Whitlam, McMahon resigned and Fraser became Shadow Minister for Labour under Billy Snedden.

Opposition (1972–1975)

After the Coalition lost the 1972 election, Fraser was one of five candidates for the Liberal leadership that had been vacated by McMahon. He outpolled John Gorton and James Killen, but was eliminated on the third ballot. Billy Snedden eventually defeated Nigel Bowen by a single vote on the fifth ballot. In the new shadow cabinet – which featured only Liberals – Fraser was given responsibility for primary industry. This was widely seen as a snub, as the new portfolio kept him mostly out of the public eye and was likely to be given to a member of the Country Party when the Coalition returned to government.[13] In an August 1973 reshuffle, Snedden instead made him the Liberals' spokesman for industrial relations. He had hoped to be given responsibility for foreign affairs (in place of the retiring Nigel Bowen), but that role was given to Andrew Peacock.[14] Fraser oversaw the development of the party's new industrial relations policy, which was released in April 1974. It was seen as more flexible and even-handed than the policy that the Coalition had pursued in government, and was received well by the media.[15] According to Fraser's biographer Philip Ayres, by "putting a new policy in place, he managed to modify his public image and emerge as an excellent communicator across a traditionally hostile divide".[14]

Leader of the Opposition

After the Liberals lost the 1974 election, Fraser unsuccessfully challenged Snedden for the leadership in November. Despite surviving the challenge, Snedden's position in opinion polls continued to decline and he was unable to get the better of Whitlam in the Parliament. Fraser again challenged Snedden on 21 March 1975, this time succeeding and becoming Leader of the Liberal Party and Leader of the Opposition.

Role in the Dismissal

Following a series of ministerial scandals engulfing the Whitlam government later that year, Fraser began to instruct Coalition senators to delay the government's budget bills, with the objective of forcing an early election that he believed he would win. After several months of political deadlock, during which time the government secretly explored methods of obtaining supply funding outside the Parliament, the Governor-General, Sir John Kerr, controversially dismissed Whitlam as prime minister on 11 November 1975.[16]

Fraser was immediately sworn in as caretaker prime minister on the condition that he end the political deadlock and call an immediate double dissolution election.

On 19 November 1975, shortly after the election had been called, a letter bomb was sent to Fraser, but it was intercepted and defused before it reached him. Similar devices were sent to the governor-general and the Premier of Queensland, Joh Bjelke-Petersen.[17][18]

Prime Minister (1975–1983)

1975 and 1977 federal elections

 
Fraser in 1976

At the 1975 election, Fraser led the Liberal-Country Party Coalition to a landslide victory. The Coalition won 91 seats of a possible 127 in the election to gain a 55-seat majority,[19] which remains to date the largest in Australian history. Fraser subsequently led the Coalition to a second victory in 1977, with only a very small decrease in their vote. The Liberals actually won a majority in their own right in both of these elections, something that Menzies and Holt had never achieved. Although Fraser thus had no need for the support of the (National) Country Party to govern, he retained the formal Coalition between the two parties.

Fiscal policy

 
Fraser at a White House state dinner in 1976, being introduced to actor Gregory Peck by President Gerald Ford

Fraser quickly dismantled some of the programs of the Whitlam government, such as the Ministry of the Media, and made major changes to the universal health insurance system Medibank. He initially maintained Whitlam's levels of tax and spending, but real per-person tax and spending soon began to increase. He did manage to rein in inflation, which had soared under Whitlam. His so-called "Razor Gang" implemented stringent budget cuts across many areas of the Commonwealth Public Sector, including the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC).[20]

Fraser practised Keynesian economics during his time as Prime Minister,[21] in part demonstrated by running budget deficits throughout his term as Prime Minister.[22] He was the Liberal Party's last Keynesian Prime Minister. Though he had long been identified with the Liberal Party's right wing, he did not carry out the radically conservative program that his political enemies had predicted, and that some of his followers wanted. Fraser's relatively moderate policies particularly disappointed the Treasurer, John Howard, as well as other ministers who were strong adherents of fiscal conservatism and economic liberalism,[21] and therefore detractors of Keynesian economics. The government's economic record was marred by rising double-digit unemployment and double-digit inflation, creating "stagflation", caused in part by the ongoing effects of the 1973 oil crisis.

Foreign policy

 
Fraser and US president Jimmy Carter in June 1977

Fraser was particularly active in foreign policy as prime minister. He supported the Commonwealth in campaigning to abolish apartheid in South Africa and refused permission for the aircraft carrying the Springbok rugby team to refuel on Australian territory en route to their controversial 1981 tour of New Zealand.[23] However, an earlier tour by the South African ski boat angling team was allowed to pass through Australia on the way to New Zealand in 1977 and the transit records were suppressed by Cabinet order.[24]

Fraser also strongly opposed white minority rule in Rhodesia. During the 1979 Commonwealth Conference, Fraser, together with his Nigerian counterpart, convinced the newly elected British prime minister, Margaret Thatcher, to withhold recognition of the internal settlement Zimbabwe Rhodesia government; Thatcher had earlier promised to recognise it. Subsequently, the Lancaster House Agreement was signed and Robert Mugabe was elected leader of an independent Zimbabwe at the inaugural 1980 election. Duncan Campbell, a former deputy secretary of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade has stated that Fraser was "the principal architect" in the ending of white minority rule.[25] The President of Tanzania, Julius Nyerere, said that he considered Fraser's role "crucial in many parts" and the President of Zambia, Kenneth Kaunda, called his contribution "vital".[26]

Under Fraser, Australia recognised Indonesia's annexation of East Timor, although many East Timorese refugees were granted asylum in Australia.

Fraser was also a strong supporter of the United States and supported the boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow. However, although he persuaded some sporting bodies not to compete, Fraser did not try to prevent the Australian Olympic Committee sending a team to the Moscow Games.

Other policy

Fraser also surprised his critics over immigration policy; according to 1977 Cabinet documents, the Fraser government adopted a formal policy for "a humanitarian commitment to admit refugees for resettlement".[27] Fraser's aim was to expand immigration from Asian countries and allow more refugees to enter Australia. He was a firm supporter of multiculturalism and established a government-funded multilingual radio and television network, the Special Broadcasting Service (SBS), building on their first radio stations which had been established under the Whitlam government.[28]

Despite Fraser's support for SBS, his government imposed stringent budget cuts on the national broadcaster, the ABC, which came under repeated attack from the Coalition for alleged "left-wing bias" and "unfair" coverage on their TV programs, including This Day Tonight and Four Corners, and on the ABC's new youth-oriented radio station Double Jay. One result of the cuts was a plan to establish a national youth radio network, of which Double Jay was the first station. The network was delayed for many years and did not come to fruition until the 1990s.

Fraser also legislated to give Indigenous Australians control of their traditional lands in the Northern Territory, but resisted imposing land rights laws on conservative state governments.

1980 federal election

 
The Frasers with the Reagans at the White House in 1982

At the 1980 election, Fraser saw his majority more than halved, from 48 seats to 21. The Coalition also lost control of the Senate. Despite this, Fraser remained ahead of Labor leader Bill Hayden in opinion polls. However, the economy was hit by the early 1980s recession, and a protracted scandal over tax-avoidance schemes run by some high-profile Liberals also began to hurt the government.

Disputes within the Liberal Party

In April 1981, the Minister for Industrial Relations, Andrew Peacock, resigned from the Cabinet, accusing Fraser of "constant interference in his portfolio". Fraser, however, had accused former prime minister John Gorton of the same thing a decade earlier. Peacock subsequently challenged Fraser for the leadership; although Fraser defeated Peacock, these events left him politically weakened.

Labor Party and 1983 federal election

 
Fraser in 1982, towards the end of his tenure in office

By early 1982, the popular former ACTU President, Bob Hawke, who had entered Parliament in 1980, was polling well ahead of both Fraser and the Labor Leader, Bill Hayden, on the question of who voters would rather see as prime minister. Fraser was well aware of the infighting this caused between Hayden and Hawke and had planned to call a snap election in autumn 1982, preventing the Labor Party changing leaders. These plans were derailed when Fraser suffered a severe back injury. Shortly after recovering from his injury, the Liberal Party narrowly won a by-election in the marginal seat of Flinders in December 1982. The failure of the Labor Party to win the seat convinced Fraser that he would be able to win an election against Hayden.

As leadership tensions began to grow in the Labor Party throughout January, Fraser subsequently resolved to call a double dissolution election at the earliest opportunity, hoping to capitalise on Labor's disunity. He knew that if the writs were issued soon enough, Labor would essentially be frozen into going into the subsequent election with Hayden as leader.

On 3 February 1983, Fraser arranged to visit the Governor-General of Australia, Sir Ninian Stephen, intending to ask for a surprise election. However, Fraser made his run too late. Without any knowledge of Fraser's plans, Hayden resigned as Labor leader just two hours before Fraser travelled to Government House. This meant that the considerably more popular Hawke was able to replace him at almost exactly the same time that the writs were issued for the election. Although Fraser reacted to the move by saying he looked forward to "knock[ing] two Labor Leaders off in one go" at the forthcoming election, Labor immediately surged in the opinion polls.[29]

At the election on 5 March the Coalition was heavily defeated, suffering a 24-seat swing, the worst defeat of a non-Labor government since Federation. Fraser immediately announced his resignation as Liberal leader and formally resigned as prime minister on 11 March 1983; he retired from Parliament two months later. To date, he is the last non-interim prime minister from a rural seat.

Retirement

In retirement Fraser was Chairman of the UN Panel of Eminent Persons on the Role of Transnational Corporations in South Africa 1985, as Co-Chairman of the Commonwealth Group of Eminent Persons on South Africa in 1985–86 (appointed by Prime Minister Hawke), and as Chairman of the UN Secretary-General's Expert Group on African Commodity Issues in 1989–90. He was a distinguished international fellow at the American Enterprise Institute from 1984 to 1986. Fraser helped to establish the foreign aid group CARE organisation in Australia and became the agency's international president in 1991, and worked with a number of other charitable organisations.[30] In 2006, he was appointed Professorial Fellow at the Asia Pacific Centre for Military Law, and in October 2007 he presented his inaugural professorial lecture, "Finding Security in Terrorism's Shadow: The importance of the rule of law".[31]

Memphis trousers affair

On 14 October 1986, Fraser, then the Chairman of the Commonwealth Eminent Persons Group, was found in the foyer of the Admiral Benbow Inn, a seedy Memphis hotel, wearing only a pair of underpants and confused as to where his trousers were. The hotel was an establishment popular with prostitutes and drug dealers. Though it was rumoured at the time that the former Prime Minister had been with a prostitute, his wife stated that Fraser had no recollection of the events and that she believes it more likely that he was the victim of a practical joke by his fellow delegates.[32]

Estrangement from the Liberal Party

 
Fraser at Parliament House in 2008, for Kevin Rudd's national apology to the Stolen Generations

In 1993, Fraser made a bid for the Liberal Party presidency but withdrew at the last minute following opposition to his bid, which was raised due to his having been critical of then Liberal leader John Hewson for losing the election earlier that year.[33]

After 1996, Fraser was critical of the Howard Coalition government over foreign policy issues, particularly John Howard's alignment with the foreign policy of the Bush administration, which Fraser saw as damaging Australian relationships in Asia. He opposed Howard's policy on asylum-seekers, campaigned in support of an Australian Republic and attacked what he perceived as a lack of integrity in Australian politics, together with former Labor prime minister Gough Whitlam, finding much common ground with his predecessor and his successor Bob Hawke, another republican.[34][35]

The 2001 election continued his estrangement from the Liberal Party. Many Liberals criticised the Fraser years as "a decade of lost opportunity" on deregulation of the Australian economy and other issues. In early 2004, a Young Liberal convention in Hobart called for Fraser's life membership of the Liberal Party to be ended.[36]

In 2006, Fraser criticised Howard Liberal government policies on areas such as refugees, terrorism and civil liberties, and that "if Australia continues to follow United States policies, it runs the risk of being embroiled in the conflict in Iraq for decades, and a fear of Islam in the Australian community will take years to eradicate". Fraser claimed that the way the Howard government handled the David Hicks, Cornelia Rau and Vivian Solon cases was questionable.[37][38]

On 20 July 2007, Fraser sent an open letter to members of the large activist group GetUp!, encouraging members to support GetUp's campaign for a change in policy on Iraq including a clearly defined exit strategy.[39] Fraser stated: "One of the things we should say to the Americans, quite simply, is that if the United States is not prepared to involve itself in high-level diplomacy concerning Iraq and other Middle East questions, our forces will be withdrawn before Christmas."[40]

After the defeat of the Howard government at the 2007 federal election, Fraser claimed Howard approached him in a corridor, following a cabinet meeting in May 1977 regarding Vietnamese refugees, and said: "We don't want too many of these people. We're doing this just for show, aren't we?" The claims were made by Fraser in an interview to mark the release of the 1977 cabinet papers. Howard, through a spokesman, denied having made the comment.[41]

In October 2007 Fraser gave a speech to Melbourne Law School on terrorism and "the importance of the rule of law,"[42] which Liberal MP Sophie Mirabella[43] condemned in January 2008, claiming errors and "either intellectual sloppiness or deliberate dishonesty", and claimed that he tacitly supported Islamic fundamentalism, that he should have no influence on foreign policy, and claimed his stance on the war on terror had left him open to caricature as a "frothing-at-the-mouth leftie".[44]

Shortly after Tony Abbott won the 2009 Liberal Party leadership spill, Fraser ended his Liberal Party membership,[45] stating the party was "no longer a liberal party but a conservative party".[46]

Later political activity

 
Bust of Malcolm Fraser by political cartoonist, caricaturist and sculptor Peter Nicholson located in the Prime Minister's Avenue in the Ballarat Botanical Gardens

In December 2011, Fraser was highly critical of the Australian government's decision (also supported by the Liberal Party Opposition) to permit the export of uranium to India, relaxing the Fraser government's policy of banning sales of uranium to countries that are not signatories of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.[47]

In 2012, Fraser criticised the basing of US military forces in Australia.[48]

In late 2012, Fraser wrote a foreword for the journal Jurisprudence where he openly criticised the current state of human rights in Australia and the Western World. "It is a sobering thought that in recent times, freedoms hard won through centuries of struggle, in the United Kingdom and elsewhere have been whittled away. In Australia alone we have laws that allow the secret detention of the innocent. We have had a vast expansion of the power of intelligence agencies. In many cases the onus of proof has been reversed and the justice that once prevailed has been gravely diminished."[49]

In July 2013, Fraser endorsed Australian Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young for re-election in a television advertisement, stating she had been a "reasonable and fair-minded voice".[50]

Fraser's books include Malcolm Fraser: The Political Memoirs (with Margaret Simons – The Miegunyah Press, 2010) and Dangerous Allies (Melbourne University Press, 2014), which warns of "strategic dependence" on the United States.[51] In the book and in talks promoting it, he criticised the concept of American exceptionalism and US foreign policy.[52][53]

Personal life

Marriage and children

 
Malcolm and Tamie Fraser at a political event in 1958

On 9 December 1956, Fraser married Tamara "Tamie" Beggs, who was almost six years his junior. They had met at a New Year's Eve party, and bonded over similar personal backgrounds and political views. The couple had four children together: Mark (b. 1958), Angela (b. 1959), Hugh (b. 1963), and Phoebe (b. 1966). Tamie frequently assisted her husband in campaigning, and her gregariousness was seen as complementing his more shy and reserved nature. She advised him on most of the important decisions in his career, and in retirement he observed that "if she had been prime minister in 1983, we would have won".[54]

Views on religion

Fraser attended Anglican schools, although his parents were Presbyterian.[55] In university he was inclined towards atheism, once writing that "the idea that God exists is a nonsense". However, his beliefs became less definite over time and tended towards agnosticism.[56] During his political career, he occasionally self-described as Christian, such as in a 1975 interview with The Catholic Weekly.[57] Margaret Simons, the co-author of Fraser's memoirs, thought that he was "not religious, and yet thinks religion is a necessary thing". In a 2010 interview with her, he said: "I would probably like to be less logical and, you know, really able to believe there is a God, whether it is Allah, or the Christian God, or some other – but I think I studied too much philosophy ... you can never know".[58]

Death and legacy

 
Fraser's grave within the Prime Ministers Garden of Melbourne General Cemetery

Fraser died on 20 March 2015 at the age of 84, after a brief illness.[59][60] An obituary noted that there had been "greater appreciation of the constructive and positive nature of his post-prime ministerial contribution" as his retirement years progressed. Fraser's death came five months after that of his predecessor and political rival Gough Whitlam.[30]

Upon his death, Fraser's 1983 nemesis and often bitter opponent Bob Hawke fondly described him as a "very significant figure in the history of Australian politics" who, in his post-Prime Ministerial years, "became an outstanding figure in the advancement of human rights issues in all respects", praised him for being "extraordinarily generous and welcoming to refugees from Indochina" and concluded that Fraser had "moved so far to the left he was almost out of sight".[61] Andrew Peacock, who had challenged Fraser for the Liberal leadership and later succeeded him, said that he had "a deep respect and pleasurable memories of the first five years of the Fraser government... I disagreed with him later on but during that period in the 1970s he was a very effective Prime Minister", and lamented that "despite all my arguments with him later on I am filled with admiration for his efforts on China".[62]

Fraser was given a state funeral at Scots' Church in Melbourne on 27 March 2015.[63] His ashes are interred within the Prime Ministers Garden of Melbourne General Cemetery.

In 2004, Fraser designated the University of Melbourne the official custodian of his personal papers and library to create the Malcolm Fraser Collection at the university.[64]

A street in Abuja, Nigeria, is named after Malcolm Fraser.

In June 2018, he was honoured with the naming of the Australian Electoral Division of Fraser in the inner north-western suburbs of Melbourne.[65]

Published works

  • Malcolm Fraser: The Political Memoirs (Melbourne: The Miegunyah Press, 2010).
  • Dangerous Allies (Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 2014).

Honours

Orders

Foreign honours

Organisations

Appointments

Personal

Fellowships

Academic degrees

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Margaret Simons; Malcolm Fraser (2010). Malcolm Fraser: The Political Memoirs. The Miegunyah Press. ISBN 9780522867039.
  2. ^ Ayres (1987), pp. 51–56.
  3. ^ Fraser & Simons (2011), pp. 76.
  4. ^ Ayres (1987), p. 61.
  5. ^ Ayres (1987), p. 62.
  6. ^ Ayres (1987), p. 64.
  7. ^ Ayres (1987), pp. 80–81.
  8. ^ Ayres (1987), pp. 90–91.
  9. ^ Ayres (1987), pp. 96–99.
  10. ^ Ayres (1987), pp. 100–102.
  11. ^ Mary Alexander (15 July 2011). "Life and spaghetti on the Frasers' farm". standard.net.au. Mr Fraser stood up in Parliament on March 10, 1971, and announced his resignation as defence minister. Mr Fraser slammed prime minister John Gorton's interference in his ministerial responsibilities and accused him of disloyalty, saying he was 'not fit to hold the great office of Prime minister'.
  12. ^ "Hughes's wintry blast for the undertaker PM". The Sydney Morning Herald. 1 June 2002. Retrieved 20 March 2015.
  13. ^ Ayres (1987), p. 203.
  14. ^ a b Ayres (1987), p. 213.
  15. ^ Ayres (1987), pp. 214–220.
  16. ^ In Matters for Judgment, Sir John Kerr recounted having to reject (on the ground that it was unsigned) government advice to that end proffered by the attorney-general, Kep Enderby.
  17. ^ "Letter Bomb Injures Two". The Palm Beach Post. 20 November 1975. p. A14. Retrieved 22 April 2013.[permanent dead link]
  18. ^ O'Malley, Brendan (8 October 2009). "Letter bomb spells an explosive end to innocence". The Courier-Mail. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  19. ^ "Timeline: Malcolm Fraser's political career". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 20 March 2015.
  20. ^ . Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Archived from the original on 11 May 2011. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  21. ^ a b . guides.naa.gov.au. Archived from the original on 24 March 2015. Retrieved 14 June 2015.
  22. ^ "Federal government deficit and debt since federation: The Australian 10 May 2014". resources1.news.com.au. Retrieved 14 June 2015.
  23. ^ "When talk of racism is just not cricket". The Sydney Morning Herald. 16 December 2005. Retrieved 19 August 2007.[permanent dead link]
  24. ^ "Australia let apartheid-era team pass through to NZ". The New Zealand Herald. 2 January 2008.
  25. ^ Colebatch, Hal G. P. (16 April 2008). "You got him in, so help kick him out". The Australian. News Corp Australia. Retrieved 20 March 2015.
  26. ^ Colebatch, Hal G.P. (16 April 2008). . Australian. News. Archived from the original on 18 April 2009. Retrieved 14 December 2012.
  27. ^ Steketee, Mike (1 January 2008). . Australian. News. Archived from the original on 2 January 2008. Retrieved 6 January 2008.
  28. ^ A brief history of SBS, SBS web site 7 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  29. ^ Bramston, Troy (9 June 2014). "Wrong call ushered in era of great reform". The Australian. News Corp Australia. Retrieved 20 March 2015.
  30. ^ a b Farquharson, John (20 March 2015). "A towering figure who crossed the political divide". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
  31. ^ . The Malcolm Fraser Collection. The University of Melbourne. 25 October 2007. Archived from the original on 2 January 2008. Retrieved 17 December 2007.
  32. ^ Madden, James (25 August 2007). "Mal's trousers and me: Tamie". The Australian. Retrieved 22 April 2012.
  33. ^ Simons & Fraser, p. 721.
  34. ^ . Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Archived from the original on 28 April 2010. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  35. ^ Mayoh, Lisa (12 November 2007). "Malcolm Fraser, Gough Whitlam attack political integrity | Herald Sun". News.com.au. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  36. ^ "Panellist: Malcolm Fraser". Q&A. ABC TV. 20 December 2018.
  37. ^ . ABC News. Archived from the original on 23 October 2007. Retrieved 30 December 2006.
  38. ^ . Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 20 October 2005. Archived from the original on 28 March 2010. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  39. ^ . GetUp!. Archived from the original on 9 August 2007. Retrieved 20 July 2007.
  40. ^ Grattan, Michelle (20 July 2007). "Fraser call to pressure US on Iraq". The Age. Retrieved 20 March 2015.
  41. ^ Mike Steketee, National Affairs editor (1 January 2008). . The Australian. Archived from the original on 14 April 2009. Retrieved 25 April 2010. {{cite news}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  42. ^ . Melbourne Law School. 25 October 2007. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. The six decades since the advent of the United Nations have been marked by significant progress towards the ideal of a world ruled by law. In Professor Fraser's view, the Bush Administration, in its pursuit of its self-declared 'global war on terror', has done much to retard this progress. In his inaugural Professorial Lecture, he will address this regression and the Howard government's complicity in it, with his own suggestions for restoring the rule of law.
  43. ^ Schubert, Misha; Cooke, Dewi (14 February 2008). "Ms Mirabella boycotted the historic national apology to the 'Stolen Generations'". The Age. Melbourne. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  44. ^ Sexton, Reid (6 January 2008). "Liberal MP attacks 'frothing' Fraser– National". The Age. Melbourne. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  45. ^ Austin, Paul (26 May 2010). "Malcolm Fraser Quits Liberal Party: The Age 26/5/2010". The Age. Melbourne. Retrieved 5 June 2010.
  46. ^ Gillham, Alexis (26 May 2010). "Former PM Malcolm Fraser quits Liberals: Herald Sun 26/5/2010". Herald Sun. Retrieved 5 June 2010.
  47. ^ Fraser, Malcolm (12 December 2011). "Why Gillard's uranium-to-India policy is dangerously wrong". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
  48. ^ "A flap grows Down Under over new USMC rotations." Marine Times. 23 April 2012.
  49. ^ (PDF). The Journal Jurisprudence. 15. September 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 April 2013. Retrieved 4 December 2012.
  50. ^ Malcolm Fraser endorses Sarah Hanson-Young in TV ad. The Sydney Morning Herald. 28 July 2013.
  51. ^ Book review: Dangerous Allies by Malcolm Fraser.
  52. ^ Westcott, Ben (12 May 2014). "Malcolm Fraser calls for an end to the Australian-US alliance". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  53. ^ "The American influence". The Economist. 30 May 2014.
  54. ^ Malcolm Fraser: Guide to Archives of Australia's Prime Ministers > Chapter 5: Tamie Fraser 4 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine, National Archives of Australia. Retrieved 3 March 2018.
  55. ^ Williams, Roy (2013). In God They Trust?: The Religious Beliefs of Australia's Prime Ministers, 1901–2013. Bible Society Australia. p. 172. ISBN 9780647518557.
  56. ^ Williams (2013), p. 174.
  57. ^ Williams (2013), p. 175.
  58. ^ Williams (2013), p. 181.
  59. ^ "Former prime minister Malcolm Fraser dead at 84". The Sydney Morning Herald. 20 March 2015. Retrieved 20 March 2015.
  60. ^ "Malcolm Fraser: Australia's 22nd prime minister dies aged 84". ABC News. 20 March 2015. Retrieved 20 March 2015.
  61. ^ Hawke, Robert (March 2015). "Bob Hawke on Malcolm Fraser". SkyNewsAustralia. Archived from the original on 11 December 2021. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
  62. ^ Andrew Peacock, Sentiments on Australia’s influential political figures, The Australian, 12 March 2019. Retrieved 13 March 2019.
  63. ^ "Former prime minister Malcolm Fraser farewelled at state funeral in Scots' Church in Melbourne". ABC News. 27 March 2015.
  64. ^ "The Malcolm Fraser Collection". University of Melbourne. Retrieved 17 December 2007.
  65. ^ "Proposed redistribution of Victoria into electoral divisions" (PDF). Australian Electoral Commission. Retrieved 21 June 2018.
  66. ^ It's an Honour 14 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine – Companion of Honour
  67. ^ It's an Honour 29 January 2019(Date mismatch) at the Wayback Machine – Companion of the Order of Australia
  68. ^ vestnesis.lv (10 November 1999). "Par apbalvošanu ar Triju Zvaigžņu ordeni un ordeņa Goda zīmi - Latvijas Vēstnesis" [Of the awarding of the Order of the Three Stars and the Medal of Honor of the Order]. Latvijas Vēstnesis (in Latvian). Retrieved 1 December 2020.
  69. ^ "Former Aust PM awarded top honour", The National, 31 December 2009

Bibliography

  • Simons, Margaret; Fraser, Malcolm (2010). Malcolm Fraser: The Political Memoirs. Melbourne University Publishing Limited (Miegunyah Press). ISBN 978-0-522-85579-1.

Further reading

  • Ayres, Philip (1987), Malcolm Fraser, a Biography, Heinemann, Richmond, Victoria. ISBN 0-85561-060-3
  • Kelly, Paul (2000), Malcolm Fraser, in Michelle Grattan (ed.), Australian Prime Ministers, New Holland, Sydney, New South Wales. ISBN 1-86436-756-3
  • Kerr, John (1978), Matters for Judgment. An Autobiography, Macmillan, South Melbourne, Victoria. ISBN 0-333-25212-8
  • Lopez, Mark (2000),The Origins of Multiculturalism in Australian Politics 1945–1975, Melbourne University Press, Carlton South, Victoria. ISBN 0-522-84895-8
  • Mitcham, Chad J. (2022), 'Griffith, Allan Thomas (1922–1998)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/griffith-allan-thomas-444/text39690, published online 2022
  • O'Brien, Patrick (1985), Factions, Feuds and Fancies. The Liberals, Viking, Ringwood, Victoria. ISBN 0-670-80893-8
  • Reid, Alan (1971), The Gorton Experiment, Shakespeare Head Press, Sydney, New South Wales
  • Reid, Alan (1976), The Whitlam Venture, Hill of Content, Melbourne, Victoria. ISBN 0-85572-079-4
  • Schneider, Russell (1980), War Without Blood. Malcolm Fraser in Power, Angus and Robertson, Sydney, New South Wales. ISBN 0-207-14196-7
  • Snedden, Billy Mackie and Schedvin, M. Bernie (1990), Billy Snedden. An Unlikely Liberal, Macmillan, South Melbourne, esp. Ch. XV and XVI. ISBN 0-333-50130-6

External links

  • Malcolm Fraser– Australia's Prime Ministers / National Archives of Australia
  • Australian Biography– Malcolm Fraser An extensive 1994 interview with Fraser
  • The Malcolm Fraser Collection at the University of Melbourne Archives
  • Malcolm Fraser at the National Film and Sound Archive
  • How to revive a party that seems to be stuck in opposition: Malcolm Fraser– The Age 11/02/2008
  • Balanced policy the only way to peace: Malcolm Fraser– The Age 10/05/2008
Parliament of Australia
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Wannon
1955–1983
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Minister for the Army
1966–1968
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Education and Science
1968–1969
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Defence
1969–1971
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Education and Science
1971–1972
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the Opposition
1975
Preceded by Prime Minister of Australia
1975–1983
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Leader of the Liberal Party
1975–1983
Succeeded by

malcolm, fraser, other, people, named, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspap. For other people named Malcolm Fraser see Malcolm Fraser disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Malcolm Fraser news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message John Malcolm Fraser AC CH GCL PC ˈ f r eɪ z er 21 May 1930 20 March 2015 was an Australian politician who served as the 22nd prime minister of Australia from 1975 to 1983 holding office as the leader of the Liberal Party of Australia The Right HonourableMalcolm FraserAC CH GCL PCOfficial portrait 197722nd Prime Minister of AustraliaIn office 11 November 1975 11 March 1983MonarchElizabeth IIGovernors GeneralSir John KerrSir Zelman CowenSir Ninian StephenDeputyDoug AnthonyPreceded byGough WhitlamSucceeded byBob HawkeLeader of the Liberal PartyIn office 21 March 1975 11 March 1983DeputyPhillip LynchJohn HowardPreceded byBilly SneddenSucceeded byAndrew PeacockLeader of the OppositionIn office 21 March 1975 11 November 1975Prime MinisterGough WhitlamDeputyPhillip LynchPreceded byBilly SneddenSucceeded byGough WhitlamMinister for Education and ScienceIn office 20 August 1971 5 December 1972Prime MinisterWilliam McMahonPreceded byDavid FairbairnSucceeded byGough WhitlamIn office 28 February 1968 12 November 1969Prime MinisterJohn GortonPreceded byJohn GortonSucceeded byNigel BowenMinister for DefenceIn office 12 November 1969 8 March 1971Prime MinisterJohn GortonPreceded byAllen FairhallSucceeded byJohn GortonMinister for the ArmyIn office 26 January 1966 28 February 1968Prime MinisterHarold HoltJohn McEwenJohn GortonPreceded byJim ForbesSucceeded byPhillip LynchMember of the Australian Parliament for WannonIn office 10 December 1955 31 March 1983Preceded byDon McLeodSucceeded byDavid HawkerPersonal detailsBornJohn Malcolm Fraser 1930 05 21 21 May 1930Melbourne Victoria AustraliaDied20 March 2015 2015 03 20 aged 84 Melbourne Victoria AustraliaResting placeMelbourne General CemeteryPolitical partyLiberal until 2009 SpouseTamara Beggs m 1956 wbr Children4RelativesSimon Fraser Sr grandfather Simon Fraser Jr uncle EducationTudor House SchoolMelbourne Grammar SchoolAlma materMagdalen College OxfordOccupationPastoral farmerSignatureFraser was raised on his father s sheep stations and after studying at Magdalen College Oxford returned to Australia to take over the family property in the Western District of Victoria After an initial defeat in 1954 he was elected to the Australian House of Representatives at the 1955 federal election as a member of parliament MP for the division of Wannon He was 25 at the time making him one of the youngest people ever elected to parliament When Harold Holt became prime minister in 1966 Fraser was appointed Minister for the Army After Holt s disappearance and replacement by John Gorton Fraser became Minister for Education and Science 1968 1969 and then Minister for Defence 1969 1971 In 1971 Fraser resigned from cabinet and denounced Gorton as unfit to hold the great office of prime minister this precipitated the replacement of Gorton with William McMahon He subsequently returned to his old education and science portfolio After the Liberal National Coalition was defeated at the 1972 election Fraser unsuccessfully stood for the Liberal leadership losing to Billy Snedden When the party lost the 1974 election he began to move against Snedden eventually mounting a successful challenge in March 1975 As Leader of the Opposition Fraser used the Coalition s control of the Australian Senate to block supply to the Whitlam government precipitating the 1975 Australian constitutional crisis This culminated with Gough Whitlam being dismissed as prime minister by the governor general Sir John Kerr a unique occurrence in Australian history The correctness of Fraser s actions in the crisis and the exact nature of his involvement in Kerr s decision have since been a topic of debate Fraser remains the only Australian prime minister to ascend to the position upon the dismissal of his predecessor After Whitlam s dismissal Fraser was sworn in as prime minister on an initial caretaker basis The Coalition won a landslide victory at the 1975 election and was re elected in 1977 and 1980 Fraser took a keen interest in foreign affairs as prime minister and was more active in the international sphere than many of his predecessors He was a strong supporter of multiculturalism and during his term in office Australia admitted significant numbers of non white immigrants including Vietnamese boat people for the first time effectively ending the White Australia policy His government also established the Special Broadcasting Service SBS Particularly in his final years in office Fraser came into conflict with the dry economic rationalist and fiscal conservative faction of his party His government made few major changes to economic policy After losing the 1983 election Fraser retired from politics In his post political career he held advisory positions with the United Nations UN and the Commonwealth of Nations and was president of the aid agency CARE from 1990 to 1995 He resigned his membership of the Liberal Party in 2009 after the election of Tony Abbott as leader Fraser having been a critic of the Liberals policy direction for a number of years Evaluations of Fraser s prime ministership have been mixed He is generally credited with restoring stability to the country after a series of short term leaders and has been praised for his commitment to multiculturalism and opposition to apartheid but the circumstances of his entry to office remains controversial and many have viewed his government as a lost opportunity for economic reform His seven and a half year tenure as prime minister is the fourth longest in Australian history only surpassed by Bob Hawke John Howard and Robert Menzies Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Birth and family background 1 2 Childhood 1 3 University 2 Early political career 3 Backbencher 4 Cabinet Minister and Gorton downfall 5 Opposition 1972 1975 5 1 Leader of the Opposition 5 2 Role in the Dismissal 6 Prime Minister 1975 1983 6 1 1975 and 1977 federal elections 6 2 Fiscal policy 6 3 Foreign policy 6 4 Other policy 6 5 1980 federal election 6 6 Disputes within the Liberal Party 6 7 Labor Party and 1983 federal election 7 Retirement 7 1 Memphis trousers affair 7 2 Estrangement from the Liberal Party 7 3 Later political activity 8 Personal life 8 1 Marriage and children 8 2 Views on religion 9 Death and legacy 10 Published works 11 Honours 11 1 Appointments 12 See also 13 References 14 Bibliography 15 Further reading 16 External linksEarly life EditBirth and family background Edit John Malcolm Fraser was born in Toorak Melbourne Victoria on 21 May 1930 He was the second of two children born to Una Arnold nee Woolf and John Neville Fraser his older sister Lorraine had been born in 1928 Both he and his father were known exclusively by their middle names His paternal grandfather Sir Simon Fraser was born in Nova Scotia Canada and arrived in Australia in 1853 He made his fortune as a railway contractor and later acquired significant pastoral holdings becoming a member of the squattocracy Fraser s maternal grandfather Louis Woolf was born in Dunedin New Zealand and arrived in Australia as a child He was of Jewish origin a fact which his grandson did not learn until he was an adult A chartered accountant by trade he married Amy Booth who was related to the wealthy Hordern family of Sydney and was a first cousin of Sir Samuel Hordern 1 Fraser had a political background on both sides of his family His father served on the Wakool Shire Council including as president for two years and was an admirer of Billy Hughes and a friend of Richard Casey Simon Fraser served in both houses of the colonial Parliament of Victoria and represented Victoria at several of the constitutional conventions of the 1890s He eventually become one of the inaugural members of the new federal Senate serving from 1901 to 1913 as a member of the early conservative parties Louis Woolf also ran for the Senate in 1901 standing as a Free Trader in Western Australia He polled only 400 votes across the whole state and was never again a candidate for public office 1 Childhood Edit Fraser spent most of his early life at Balpool Nyang a sheep station of 15 000 hectares 37 000 acres on the Edward River near Moulamein New South Wales His father had a law degree from Magdalen College Oxford but never practised law and preferred the life of a grazier Fraser contracted a severe case of pneumonia when he was eight years old which nearly proved fatal He was home schooled until the age of ten when he was sent to board at Tudor House School in the Southern Highlands He attended Tudor House from 1940 to 1943 and then completed his secondary education at Melbourne Grammar School from 1944 to 1948 where he was a member of Rusden House While at Melbourne Grammar he lived in a flat that his parents owned on Collins Street In 1943 Fraser s father sold Balpool Nyang which had been prone to drought and bought Nareen in the Western District of Victoria He was devastated by the sale of his childhood home and regarded the day he found out about it as the worst of his life 1 University Edit In 1949 Fraser moved to England to study at Magdalen College Oxford which his father had also attended He read Philosophy Politics and Economics PPE graduating in 1952 with third class honours Although Fraser did not excel academically he regarded his time at Oxford as his intellectual awakening where he learned how to think His college tutor was Harry Weldon who was a strong influence His circle of friends at Oxford included Raymond Bonham Carter Nicolas Browne Wilkinson and John Turner In his second year he had a relationship with Anne Reid who as Anne Fairbairn later became a prominent poet After graduating Fraser considered taking a law degree or joining the British Army but eventually decided to return to Australia and take over the running of the family property 1 Early political career EditFraser returned to Australia in mid 1952 He began attending meetings of the Young Liberals in Hamilton and became acquainted with many of the local party officials In November 1953 aged 23 Fraser unexpectedly won Liberal preselection for the Division of Wannon which covered most of Victoria s Western District The previous Liberal member Dan Mackinnon had been defeated in 1951 and moved to a different electorate He was expected to be succeeded by Magnus Cormack who had recently lost his place in the Senate Fraser had put his name forward as a way of building a profile for future candidacies but mounted a strong campaign and in the end won a narrow victory 2 In January 1954 he made the first of a series of weekly radio broadcasts on 3HA Hamilton and 3YB Warrnambool titled One Australia His program consisting of a pre recorded 15 minute monologue covered a wide range of topics and was often reprinted in newspapers It continued more or less uninterrupted until his retirement from politics in 1983 and helped him build a substantial personal following in his electorate 3 At the 1954 election Fraser lost to the sitting Labor member Don McLeod by just 17 votes out of over 37 000 cast 4 However he reprised his candidacy at the early 1955 election after a redistribution made Wannon notionally Liberal McLeod concluded the reconfigured Wannon was unwinnable and retired These factors combined with the 1955 Labor Party split allowed Fraser to win a landslide victory 5 Backbencher Edit Fraser in 1956 shortly after his election to Parliament Fraser took his seat in parliament at the age of 25 the youngest sitting MP by four years and the first who had been too young to serve in World War II 6 He was re elected at the 1958 election despite being restricted in his campaigning by a bout of hepatitis 7 Fraser was soon being touted as a future member of cabinet but despite good relations with Robert Menzies never served in cabinet during Menzies tenure His long wait for ministerial preferment was probably due to a combination of his youth and the fact that Menzies ministries already contained a disproportionately high number of Victorians 8 Fraser spoke on a wide range of topics during his early years in parliament but took a particular interest in foreign affairs In 1964 he and Gough Whitlam were both awarded Leader Grants by the United States Department of State allowing them to spend two months in Washington D C getting to know American political and military leaders The Vietnam War was the main topic of conversation and on his return trip to Australia he spent two days in Saigon 9 Early in 1965 he also made a private seven day visit to Jakarta and with assistance from Ambassador Mick Shann secured meetings with various high ranking officials 10 Cabinet Minister and Gorton downfall Edit Fraser as Minister for Education and Science in 1969 with John England In 1966 after more than a decade on the backbench Sir Robert Menzies retired as Prime Minister His successor Harold Holt appointed Fraser to the ministry as Minister for the Army In that position Fraser presided over the controversial Vietnam War conscription program Under the new prime minister John Gorton he was elevated to Cabinet as Minister for Education and Science In 1969 he was promoted to Minister for Defence a particularly challenging post at the time given the height of Australia s involvement in the Vietnam War and the protests against it In March 1971 Fraser abruptly resigned from the Cabinet in protest at what he called Gorton s interference in his ministerial responsibilities and denounced Gorton on the floor of the House of Representatives as not fit to hold the great office of Prime Minister 11 This precipitated a series of events which eventually led to the downfall of Gorton and his replacement as prime minister by William McMahon In the leadership contest that followed Gorton s resignation Fraser unsuccessfully contested the deputy Liberal leadership against Gorton and David Fairbairn Gorton never forgave Fraser for the role he played in his downfall to the day Gorton died in 2002 he could not bear to be in the same room with Fraser 12 Fraser remained on the backbenches until he was reinstated to Cabinet in his old position of Minister for Education and Science by McMahon in August 1971 immediately following Gorton s sacking as deputy Liberal leader by McMahon When the Liberals were defeated at the 1972 election by the Labor Party under Gough Whitlam McMahon resigned and Fraser became Shadow Minister for Labour under Billy Snedden Opposition 1972 1975 EditAfter the Coalition lost the 1972 election Fraser was one of five candidates for the Liberal leadership that had been vacated by McMahon He outpolled John Gorton and James Killen but was eliminated on the third ballot Billy Snedden eventually defeated Nigel Bowen by a single vote on the fifth ballot In the new shadow cabinet which featured only Liberals Fraser was given responsibility for primary industry This was widely seen as a snub as the new portfolio kept him mostly out of the public eye and was likely to be given to a member of the Country Party when the Coalition returned to government 13 In an August 1973 reshuffle Snedden instead made him the Liberals spokesman for industrial relations He had hoped to be given responsibility for foreign affairs in place of the retiring Nigel Bowen but that role was given to Andrew Peacock 14 Fraser oversaw the development of the party s new industrial relations policy which was released in April 1974 It was seen as more flexible and even handed than the policy that the Coalition had pursued in government and was received well by the media 15 According to Fraser s biographer Philip Ayres by putting a new policy in place he managed to modify his public image and emerge as an excellent communicator across a traditionally hostile divide 14 Leader of the Opposition Edit After the Liberals lost the 1974 election Fraser unsuccessfully challenged Snedden for the leadership in November Despite surviving the challenge Snedden s position in opinion polls continued to decline and he was unable to get the better of Whitlam in the Parliament Fraser again challenged Snedden on 21 March 1975 this time succeeding and becoming Leader of the Liberal Party and Leader of the Opposition Role in the Dismissal Edit Main article 1975 Australian constitutional crisis Following a series of ministerial scandals engulfing the Whitlam government later that year Fraser began to instruct Coalition senators to delay the government s budget bills with the objective of forcing an early election that he believed he would win After several months of political deadlock during which time the government secretly explored methods of obtaining supply funding outside the Parliament the Governor General Sir John Kerr controversially dismissed Whitlam as prime minister on 11 November 1975 16 Fraser was immediately sworn in as caretaker prime minister on the condition that he end the political deadlock and call an immediate double dissolution election On 19 November 1975 shortly after the election had been called a letter bomb was sent to Fraser but it was intercepted and defused before it reached him Similar devices were sent to the governor general and the Premier of Queensland Joh Bjelke Petersen 17 18 Prime Minister 1975 1983 EditMain article Fraser government 1975 and 1977 federal elections Edit Fraser in 1976 At the 1975 election Fraser led the Liberal Country Party Coalition to a landslide victory The Coalition won 91 seats of a possible 127 in the election to gain a 55 seat majority 19 which remains to date the largest in Australian history Fraser subsequently led the Coalition to a second victory in 1977 with only a very small decrease in their vote The Liberals actually won a majority in their own right in both of these elections something that Menzies and Holt had never achieved Although Fraser thus had no need for the support of the National Country Party to govern he retained the formal Coalition between the two parties Fiscal policy Edit Fraser at a White House state dinner in 1976 being introduced to actor Gregory Peck by President Gerald Ford Fraser quickly dismantled some of the programs of the Whitlam government such as the Ministry of the Media and made major changes to the universal health insurance system Medibank He initially maintained Whitlam s levels of tax and spending but real per person tax and spending soon began to increase He did manage to rein in inflation which had soared under Whitlam His so called Razor Gang implemented stringent budget cuts across many areas of the Commonwealth Public Sector including the Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC 20 Fraser practised Keynesian economics during his time as Prime Minister 21 in part demonstrated by running budget deficits throughout his term as Prime Minister 22 He was the Liberal Party s last Keynesian Prime Minister Though he had long been identified with the Liberal Party s right wing he did not carry out the radically conservative program that his political enemies had predicted and that some of his followers wanted Fraser s relatively moderate policies particularly disappointed the Treasurer John Howard as well as other ministers who were strong adherents of fiscal conservatism and economic liberalism 21 and therefore detractors of Keynesian economics The government s economic record was marred by rising double digit unemployment and double digit inflation creating stagflation caused in part by the ongoing effects of the 1973 oil crisis Foreign policy Edit Fraser and US president Jimmy Carter in June 1977 Fraser was particularly active in foreign policy as prime minister He supported the Commonwealth in campaigning to abolish apartheid in South Africa and refused permission for the aircraft carrying the Springbok rugby team to refuel on Australian territory en route to their controversial 1981 tour of New Zealand 23 However an earlier tour by the South African ski boat angling team was allowed to pass through Australia on the way to New Zealand in 1977 and the transit records were suppressed by Cabinet order 24 Fraser also strongly opposed white minority rule in Rhodesia During the 1979 Commonwealth Conference Fraser together with his Nigerian counterpart convinced the newly elected British prime minister Margaret Thatcher to withhold recognition of the internal settlement Zimbabwe Rhodesia government Thatcher had earlier promised to recognise it Subsequently the Lancaster House Agreement was signed and Robert Mugabe was elected leader of an independent Zimbabwe at the inaugural 1980 election Duncan Campbell a former deputy secretary of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade has stated that Fraser was the principal architect in the ending of white minority rule 25 The President of Tanzania Julius Nyerere said that he considered Fraser s role crucial in many parts and the President of Zambia Kenneth Kaunda called his contribution vital 26 Under Fraser Australia recognised Indonesia s annexation of East Timor although many East Timorese refugees were granted asylum in Australia Fraser was also a strong supporter of the United States and supported the boycott of the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow However although he persuaded some sporting bodies not to compete Fraser did not try to prevent the Australian Olympic Committee sending a team to the Moscow Games Other policy Edit Fraser also surprised his critics over immigration policy according to 1977 Cabinet documents the Fraser government adopted a formal policy for a humanitarian commitment to admit refugees for resettlement 27 Fraser s aim was to expand immigration from Asian countries and allow more refugees to enter Australia He was a firm supporter of multiculturalism and established a government funded multilingual radio and television network the Special Broadcasting Service SBS building on their first radio stations which had been established under the Whitlam government 28 Despite Fraser s support for SBS his government imposed stringent budget cuts on the national broadcaster the ABC which came under repeated attack from the Coalition for alleged left wing bias and unfair coverage on their TV programs including This Day Tonight and Four Corners and on the ABC s new youth oriented radio station Double Jay One result of the cuts was a plan to establish a national youth radio network of which Double Jay was the first station The network was delayed for many years and did not come to fruition until the 1990s Fraser also legislated to give Indigenous Australians control of their traditional lands in the Northern Territory but resisted imposing land rights laws on conservative state governments 1980 federal election Edit The Frasers with the Reagans at the White House in 1982 At the 1980 election Fraser saw his majority more than halved from 48 seats to 21 The Coalition also lost control of the Senate Despite this Fraser remained ahead of Labor leader Bill Hayden in opinion polls However the economy was hit by the early 1980s recession and a protracted scandal over tax avoidance schemes run by some high profile Liberals also began to hurt the government Disputes within the Liberal Party Edit In April 1981 the Minister for Industrial Relations Andrew Peacock resigned from the Cabinet accusing Fraser of constant interference in his portfolio Fraser however had accused former prime minister John Gorton of the same thing a decade earlier Peacock subsequently challenged Fraser for the leadership although Fraser defeated Peacock these events left him politically weakened Labor Party and 1983 federal election Edit Fraser in 1982 towards the end of his tenure in office By early 1982 the popular former ACTU President Bob Hawke who had entered Parliament in 1980 was polling well ahead of both Fraser and the Labor Leader Bill Hayden on the question of who voters would rather see as prime minister Fraser was well aware of the infighting this caused between Hayden and Hawke and had planned to call a snap election in autumn 1982 preventing the Labor Party changing leaders These plans were derailed when Fraser suffered a severe back injury Shortly after recovering from his injury the Liberal Party narrowly won a by election in the marginal seat of Flinders in December 1982 The failure of the Labor Party to win the seat convinced Fraser that he would be able to win an election against Hayden As leadership tensions began to grow in the Labor Party throughout January Fraser subsequently resolved to call a double dissolution election at the earliest opportunity hoping to capitalise on Labor s disunity He knew that if the writs were issued soon enough Labor would essentially be frozen into going into the subsequent election with Hayden as leader On 3 February 1983 Fraser arranged to visit the Governor General of Australia Sir Ninian Stephen intending to ask for a surprise election However Fraser made his run too late Without any knowledge of Fraser s plans Hayden resigned as Labor leader just two hours before Fraser travelled to Government House This meant that the considerably more popular Hawke was able to replace him at almost exactly the same time that the writs were issued for the election Although Fraser reacted to the move by saying he looked forward to knock ing two Labor Leaders off in one go at the forthcoming election Labor immediately surged in the opinion polls 29 At the election on 5 March the Coalition was heavily defeated suffering a 24 seat swing the worst defeat of a non Labor government since Federation Fraser immediately announced his resignation as Liberal leader and formally resigned as prime minister on 11 March 1983 he retired from Parliament two months later To date he is the last non interim prime minister from a rural seat Retirement EditIn retirement Fraser was Chairman of the UN Panel of Eminent Persons on the Role of Transnational Corporations in South Africa 1985 as Co Chairman of the Commonwealth Group of Eminent Persons on South Africa in 1985 86 appointed by Prime Minister Hawke and as Chairman of the UN Secretary General s Expert Group on African Commodity Issues in 1989 90 He was a distinguished international fellow at the American Enterprise Institute from 1984 to 1986 Fraser helped to establish the foreign aid group CARE organisation in Australia and became the agency s international president in 1991 and worked with a number of other charitable organisations 30 In 2006 he was appointed Professorial Fellow at the Asia Pacific Centre for Military Law and in October 2007 he presented his inaugural professorial lecture Finding Security in Terrorism s Shadow The importance of the rule of law 31 Memphis trousers affair Edit On 14 October 1986 Fraser then the Chairman of the Commonwealth Eminent Persons Group was found in the foyer of the Admiral Benbow Inn a seedy Memphis hotel wearing only a pair of underpants and confused as to where his trousers were The hotel was an establishment popular with prostitutes and drug dealers Though it was rumoured at the time that the former Prime Minister had been with a prostitute his wife stated that Fraser had no recollection of the events and that she believes it more likely that he was the victim of a practical joke by his fellow delegates 32 Estrangement from the Liberal Party Edit Fraser at Parliament House in 2008 for Kevin Rudd s national apology to the Stolen Generations In 1993 Fraser made a bid for the Liberal Party presidency but withdrew at the last minute following opposition to his bid which was raised due to his having been critical of then Liberal leader John Hewson for losing the election earlier that year 33 After 1996 Fraser was critical of the Howard Coalition government over foreign policy issues particularly John Howard s alignment with the foreign policy of the Bush administration which Fraser saw as damaging Australian relationships in Asia He opposed Howard s policy on asylum seekers campaigned in support of an Australian Republic and attacked what he perceived as a lack of integrity in Australian politics together with former Labor prime minister Gough Whitlam finding much common ground with his predecessor and his successor Bob Hawke another republican 34 35 The 2001 election continued his estrangement from the Liberal Party Many Liberals criticised the Fraser years as a decade of lost opportunity on deregulation of the Australian economy and other issues In early 2004 a Young Liberal convention in Hobart called for Fraser s life membership of the Liberal Party to be ended 36 In 2006 Fraser criticised Howard Liberal government policies on areas such as refugees terrorism and civil liberties and that if Australia continues to follow United States policies it runs the risk of being embroiled in the conflict in Iraq for decades and a fear of Islam in the Australian community will take years to eradicate Fraser claimed that the way the Howard government handled the David Hicks Cornelia Rau and Vivian Solon cases was questionable 37 38 On 20 July 2007 Fraser sent an open letter to members of the large activist group GetUp encouraging members to support GetUp s campaign for a change in policy on Iraq including a clearly defined exit strategy 39 Fraser stated One of the things we should say to the Americans quite simply is that if the United States is not prepared to involve itself in high level diplomacy concerning Iraq and other Middle East questions our forces will be withdrawn before Christmas 40 After the defeat of the Howard government at the 2007 federal election Fraser claimed Howard approached him in a corridor following a cabinet meeting in May 1977 regarding Vietnamese refugees and said We don t want too many of these people We re doing this just for show aren t we The claims were made by Fraser in an interview to mark the release of the 1977 cabinet papers Howard through a spokesman denied having made the comment 41 In October 2007 Fraser gave a speech to Melbourne Law School on terrorism and the importance of the rule of law 42 which Liberal MP Sophie Mirabella 43 condemned in January 2008 claiming errors and either intellectual sloppiness or deliberate dishonesty and claimed that he tacitly supported Islamic fundamentalism that he should have no influence on foreign policy and claimed his stance on the war on terror had left him open to caricature as a frothing at the mouth leftie 44 Shortly after Tony Abbott won the 2009 Liberal Party leadership spill Fraser ended his Liberal Party membership 45 stating the party was no longer a liberal party but a conservative party 46 Later political activity Edit Bust of Malcolm Fraser by political cartoonist caricaturist and sculptor Peter Nicholson located in the Prime Minister s Avenue in the Ballarat Botanical Gardens In December 2011 Fraser was highly critical of the Australian government s decision also supported by the Liberal Party Opposition to permit the export of uranium to India relaxing the Fraser government s policy of banning sales of uranium to countries that are not signatories of the Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty 47 In 2012 Fraser criticised the basing of US military forces in Australia 48 In late 2012 Fraser wrote a foreword for the journal Jurisprudence where he openly criticised the current state of human rights in Australia and the Western World It is a sobering thought that in recent times freedoms hard won through centuries of struggle in the United Kingdom and elsewhere have been whittled away In Australia alone we have laws that allow the secret detention of the innocent We have had a vast expansion of the power of intelligence agencies In many cases the onus of proof has been reversed and the justice that once prevailed has been gravely diminished 49 In July 2013 Fraser endorsed Australian Greens Senator Sarah Hanson Young for re election in a television advertisement stating she had been a reasonable and fair minded voice 50 Fraser s books include Malcolm Fraser The Political Memoirs with Margaret Simons The Miegunyah Press 2010 and Dangerous Allies Melbourne University Press 2014 which warns of strategic dependence on the United States 51 In the book and in talks promoting it he criticised the concept of American exceptionalism and US foreign policy 52 53 Personal life EditMarriage and children Edit Malcolm and Tamie Fraser at a political event in 1958 On 9 December 1956 Fraser married Tamara Tamie Beggs who was almost six years his junior They had met at a New Year s Eve party and bonded over similar personal backgrounds and political views The couple had four children together Mark b 1958 Angela b 1959 Hugh b 1963 and Phoebe b 1966 Tamie frequently assisted her husband in campaigning and her gregariousness was seen as complementing his more shy and reserved nature She advised him on most of the important decisions in his career and in retirement he observed that if she had been prime minister in 1983 we would have won 54 Views on religion Edit Fraser attended Anglican schools although his parents were Presbyterian 55 In university he was inclined towards atheism once writing that the idea that God exists is a nonsense However his beliefs became less definite over time and tended towards agnosticism 56 During his political career he occasionally self described as Christian such as in a 1975 interview with The Catholic Weekly 57 Margaret Simons the co author of Fraser s memoirs thought that he was not religious and yet thinks religion is a necessary thing In a 2010 interview with her he said I would probably like to be less logical and you know really able to believe there is a God whether it is Allah or the Christian God or some other but I think I studied too much philosophy you can never know 58 Death and legacy Edit Fraser s grave within the Prime Ministers Garden of Melbourne General Cemetery Fraser died on 20 March 2015 at the age of 84 after a brief illness 59 60 An obituary noted that there had been greater appreciation of the constructive and positive nature of his post prime ministerial contribution as his retirement years progressed Fraser s death came five months after that of his predecessor and political rival Gough Whitlam 30 Upon his death Fraser s 1983 nemesis and often bitter opponent Bob Hawke fondly described him as a very significant figure in the history of Australian politics who in his post Prime Ministerial years became an outstanding figure in the advancement of human rights issues in all respects praised him for being extraordinarily generous and welcoming to refugees from Indochina and concluded that Fraser had moved so far to the left he was almost out of sight 61 Andrew Peacock who had challenged Fraser for the Liberal leadership and later succeeded him said that he had a deep respect and pleasurable memories of the first five years of the Fraser government I disagreed with him later on but during that period in the 1970s he was a very effective Prime Minister and lamented that despite all my arguments with him later on I am filled with admiration for his efforts on China 62 Fraser was given a state funeral at Scots Church in Melbourne on 27 March 2015 63 His ashes are interred within the Prime Ministers Garden of Melbourne General Cemetery In 2004 Fraser designated the University of Melbourne the official custodian of his personal papers and library to create the Malcolm Fraser Collection at the university 64 A street in Abuja Nigeria is named after Malcolm Fraser In June 2018 he was honoured with the naming of the Australian Electoral Division of Fraser in the inner north western suburbs of Melbourne 65 Published works EditMalcolm Fraser The Political Memoirs Melbourne The Miegunyah Press 2010 Dangerous Allies Melbourne Melbourne University Press 2014 Honours EditOrders 1977 Companion of the Order of the Companions of Honour CH 66 1988 Companion of the Order of Australia AC 67 Foreign honours 1999 Order of the Three Stars 3rd Class Commander 68 2006 Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun from the Emperor of Japan 2009 Grand Companion of the Order of Logohu GCL 69 Organisations 2000 Australian Human Rights Commission Human Rights MedalAppointments Edit Personal 1976 Her Majesty s Most Honourable Privy Council PC Fellowships Professorial Fellow Asia Pacific Centre for Military Law at the University of Melbourne Vice President and Fellow of the Royal Commonwealth Society RCS Academic degrees University of South Carolina Honorary Doctor of Laws Deakin University Honorary Doctor of the University University of Technology Sydney Honorary Doctor of Laws University of New South Wales Honorary Doctor of Laws Murdoch University Honorary Doctor of LawsSee also Edit Australia portal Biography portal Politics portal Conservatism portal University of Oxford portal1975 Australian constitutional crisis First Fraser Ministry Second Fraser Ministry Third Fraser Ministry Fourth Fraser MinistryReferences Edit a b c d Margaret Simons Malcolm Fraser 2010 Malcolm Fraser The Political Memoirs The Miegunyah Press ISBN 9780522867039 Ayres 1987 pp 51 56 Fraser amp Simons 2011 pp 76 Ayres 1987 p 61 Ayres 1987 p 62 Ayres 1987 p 64 Ayres 1987 pp 80 81 Ayres 1987 pp 90 91 Ayres 1987 pp 96 99 Ayres 1987 pp 100 102 Mary Alexander 15 July 2011 Life and spaghetti on the Frasers farm standard net au Mr Fraser stood up in Parliament on March 10 1971 and announced his resignation as defence minister Mr Fraser slammed prime minister John Gorton s interference in his ministerial responsibilities and accused him of disloyalty saying he was not fit to hold the great office of Prime minister Hughes s wintry blast for the undertaker PM The Sydney Morning Herald 1 June 2002 Retrieved 20 March 2015 Ayres 1987 p 203 a b Ayres 1987 p 213 Ayres 1987 pp 214 220 In Matters for Judgment Sir John Kerr recounted having to reject on the ground that it was unsigned government advice to that end proffered by the attorney general Kep Enderby Letter Bomb Injures Two The Palm Beach Post 20 November 1975 p A14 Retrieved 22 April 2013 permanent dead link O Malley Brendan 8 October 2009 Letter bomb spells an explosive end to innocence The Courier Mail Retrieved 22 April 2013 Timeline Malcolm Fraser s political career Australian Broadcasting Corporation 20 March 2015 The 7 30 Report Australian Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on 11 May 2011 Retrieved 25 April 2010 a b Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser Guide to Archives of Australia s Prime Ministers National Archives of Australia guides naa gov au Archived from the original on 24 March 2015 Retrieved 14 June 2015 Federal government deficit and debt since federation The Australian 10 May 2014 resources1 news com au Retrieved 14 June 2015 When talk of racism is just not cricket The Sydney Morning Herald 16 December 2005 Retrieved 19 August 2007 permanent dead link Australia let apartheid era team pass through to NZ The New Zealand Herald 2 January 2008 Colebatch Hal G P 16 April 2008 You got him in so help kick him out The Australian News Corp Australia Retrieved 20 March 2015 Colebatch Hal G P 16 April 2008 You got him in so help kick him out Australian News Archived from the original on 18 April 2009 Retrieved 14 December 2012 Steketee Mike 1 January 2008 Howard in war refugee snub Fraser Australian News Archived from the original on 2 January 2008 Retrieved 6 January 2008 A brief history of SBS SBS web site Archived 7 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine Bramston Troy 9 June 2014 Wrong call ushered in era of great reform The Australian News Corp Australia Retrieved 20 March 2015 a b Farquharson John 20 March 2015 A towering figure who crossed the political divide The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 21 March 2015 Finding Security in Terrorism s Shadow The importance of the rule of law The Malcolm Fraser Collection The University of Melbourne 25 October 2007 Archived from the original on 2 January 2008 Retrieved 17 December 2007 Madden James 25 August 2007 Mal s trousers and me Tamie The Australian Retrieved 22 April 2012 Simons amp Fraser p 721 7 30 Report 10 11 2005 Fraser speaks out on Whitlam dismissal Australian Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on 28 April 2010 Retrieved 25 April 2010 Mayoh Lisa 12 November 2007 Malcolm Fraser Gough Whitlam attack political integrity Herald Sun News com au Retrieved 25 April 2010 Panellist Malcolm Fraser Q amp A ABC TV 20 December 2018 Fraser urges Iraq policy rethink ABC News Archived from the original on 23 October 2007 Retrieved 30 December 2006 Howard rejects Fraser s concerns Australian Broadcasting Corporation 20 October 2005 Archived from the original on 28 March 2010 Retrieved 25 April 2010 A Message From Malcolm Fraser Former PM GetUp Archived from the original on 9 August 2007 Retrieved 20 July 2007 Grattan Michelle 20 July 2007 Fraser call to pressure US on Iraq The Age Retrieved 20 March 2015 Mike Steketee National Affairs editor 1 January 2008 Howard in war refugee snub Fraser The Australian Archived from the original on 14 April 2009 Retrieved 25 April 2010 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a author has generic name help Inaugural Professorial Lecture Finding Security in Terrorism s Shadow the Importance of the Rule of Law presented by Rt Hon Malcolm Fraser AC CH Melbourne Law School 25 October 2007 Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 The six decades since the advent of the United Nations have been marked by significant progress towards the ideal of a world ruled by law In Professor Fraser s view the Bush Administration in its pursuit of its self declared global war on terror has done much to retard this progress In his inaugural Professorial Lecture he will address this regression and the Howard government s complicity in it with his own suggestions for restoring the rule of law Schubert Misha Cooke Dewi 14 February 2008 Ms Mirabella boycotted the historic national apology to the Stolen Generations The Age Melbourne Retrieved 25 April 2010 Sexton Reid 6 January 2008 Liberal MP attacks frothing Fraser National The Age Melbourne Retrieved 25 April 2010 Austin Paul 26 May 2010 Malcolm Fraser Quits Liberal Party The Age 26 5 2010 The Age Melbourne Retrieved 5 June 2010 Gillham Alexis 26 May 2010 Former PM Malcolm Fraser quits Liberals Herald Sun 26 5 2010 Herald Sun Retrieved 5 June 2010 Fraser Malcolm 12 December 2011 Why Gillard s uranium to India policy is dangerously wrong The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 12 December 2011 A flap grows Down Under over new USMC rotations Marine Times 23 April 2012 Summer Term 2012 Foreword PDF The Journal Jurisprudence 15 September 2012 Archived from the original PDF on 8 April 2013 Retrieved 4 December 2012 Malcolm Fraser endorses Sarah Hanson Young in TV ad The Sydney Morning Herald 28 July 2013 Book review Dangerous Allies by Malcolm Fraser Westcott Ben 12 May 2014 Malcolm Fraser calls for an end to the Australian US alliance The Sydney Morning Herald The American influence The Economist 30 May 2014 Malcolm Fraser Guide to Archives of Australia s Prime Ministers gt Chapter 5 Tamie Fraser Archived 4 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine National Archives of Australia Retrieved 3 March 2018 Williams Roy 2013 In God They Trust The Religious Beliefs of Australia s Prime Ministers 1901 2013 Bible Society Australia p 172 ISBN 9780647518557 Williams 2013 p 174 Williams 2013 p 175 Williams 2013 p 181 Former prime minister Malcolm Fraser dead at 84 The Sydney Morning Herald 20 March 2015 Retrieved 20 March 2015 Malcolm Fraser Australia s 22nd prime minister dies aged 84 ABC News 20 March 2015 Retrieved 20 March 2015 Hawke Robert March 2015 Bob Hawke on Malcolm Fraser SkyNewsAustralia Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Retrieved 5 May 2016 Andrew Peacock Sentiments on Australia s influential political figures The Australian 12 March 2019 Retrieved 13 March 2019 Former prime minister Malcolm Fraser farewelled at state funeral in Scots Church in Melbourne ABC News 27 March 2015 The Malcolm Fraser Collection University of Melbourne Retrieved 17 December 2007 Proposed redistribution of Victoria into electoral divisions PDF Australian Electoral Commission Retrieved 21 June 2018 It s an Honour Archived 14 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine Companion of Honour It s an Honour Archived 29 January 2019 Date mismatch at the Wayback Machine Companion of the Order of Australia vestnesis lv 10 November 1999 Par apbalvosanu ar Triju Zvaigznu ordeni un ordena Goda zimi Latvijas Vestnesis Of the awarding of the Order of the Three Stars and the Medal of Honor of the Order Latvijas Vestnesis in Latvian Retrieved 1 December 2020 Former Aust PM awarded top honour The National 31 December 2009Bibliography EditSimons Margaret Fraser Malcolm 2010 Malcolm Fraser The Political Memoirs Melbourne University Publishing Limited Miegunyah Press ISBN 978 0 522 85579 1 Further reading EditAyres Philip 1987 Malcolm Fraser a Biography Heinemann Richmond Victoria ISBN 0 85561 060 3 Kelly Paul 2000 Malcolm Fraser in Michelle Grattan ed Australian Prime Ministers New Holland Sydney New South Wales ISBN 1 86436 756 3 Kerr John 1978 Matters for Judgment An Autobiography Macmillan South Melbourne Victoria ISBN 0 333 25212 8 Lopez Mark 2000 The Origins of Multiculturalism in Australian Politics 1945 1975 Melbourne University Press Carlton South Victoria ISBN 0 522 84895 8 Mitcham Chad J 2022 Griffith Allan Thomas 1922 1998 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University https adb anu edu au biography griffith allan thomas 444 text39690 published online 2022 O Brien Patrick 1985 Factions Feuds and Fancies The Liberals Viking Ringwood Victoria ISBN 0 670 80893 8 Reid Alan 1971 The Gorton Experiment Shakespeare Head Press Sydney New South Wales Reid Alan 1976 The Whitlam Venture Hill of Content Melbourne Victoria ISBN 0 85572 079 4 Schneider Russell 1980 War Without Blood Malcolm Fraser in Power Angus and Robertson Sydney New South Wales ISBN 0 207 14196 7 Snedden Billy Mackie and Schedvin M Bernie 1990 Billy Snedden An Unlikely Liberal Macmillan South Melbourne esp Ch XV and XVI ISBN 0 333 50130 6External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Malcolm Fraser Wikiquote has quotations related to Malcolm Fraser Malcolm Fraser Australia s Prime Ministers National Archives of Australia Australian Biography Malcolm Fraser An extensive 1994 interview with Fraser The Malcolm Fraser Collection at the University of Melbourne Archives Malcolm Fraser at the National Film and Sound Archive How to revive a party that seems to be stuck in opposition Malcolm Fraser The Age 11 02 2008 Balanced policy the only way to peace Malcolm Fraser The Age 10 05 2008Parliament of AustraliaPreceded byDon McLeod Member of Parliament for Wannon1955 1983 Succeeded byDavid HawkerPolitical officesPreceded byJim Forbes Minister for the Army1966 1968 Succeeded byPhillip LynchPreceded byJohn Gorton Minister for Education and Science1968 1969 Succeeded byNigel BowenPreceded byAllen Fairhall Minister for Defence1969 1971 Succeeded byJohn GortonPreceded byDavid Fairbairn Minister for Education and Science1971 1972 Succeeded byGough WhitlamPreceded byBilly Snedden Leader of the Opposition1975Preceded byGough Whitlam Prime Minister of Australia1975 1983 Succeeded byBob HawkeParty political officesPreceded byBilly Snedden Leader of the Liberal Party1975 1983 Succeeded byAndrew Peacock Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Malcolm Fraser amp oldid 1151629135, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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